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Control and Freedom - Power and Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,508
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Control and Freedom - Power and Paranoia in the Age of Fiber Optics (Paperback)
Series: Control and Freedom
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A work that bridges media archaeology and visual culture studies
argues that the Internet has emerged as a mass medium by linking
control with freedom and democracy. How has the Internet, a medium
that thrives on control, been accepted as a medium of freedom? Why
is freedom increasingly indistinguishable from paranoid control? In
Control and Freedom, Wendy Hui Kyong Chun explores the current
political and technological coupling of freedom with control by
tracing the emergence of the Internet as a mass medium. The
parallel (and paranoid) myths of the Internet as total
freedom/total control, she says, stem from our reduction of
political problems into technological ones. Drawing on the theories
of Gilles Deleuze and Michel Foucault and analyzing such phenomena
as Webcams and face-recognition technology, Chun argues that the
relationship between control and freedom in networked contact is
experienced and negotiated through sexuality and race. She traces
the desire for cyberspace to cyberpunk fiction and maps the
transformation of public/private into open/closed. Analyzing
"pornocracy," she contends that it was through cyberporn and the
government's attempts to regulate it that the Internet became a
marketplace of ideas and commodities. Chun describes the way
Internet promoters conflated technological empowerment with racial
empowerment and, through close examinations of William Gibson's
Neuromancer and Mamoru Oshii's Ghost in the Shell, she analyzes the
management of interactivity in narratives of cyberspace. The
Internet's potential for democracy stems not from illusory promises
of individual empowerment, Chun argues, but rather from the ways in
which it exposes us to others (and to other machines) in ways we
cannot control. Using fiber optic networks-light coursing through
glass tubes-as metaphor and reality, Control and Freedom engages
the rich philosophical tradition of light as a figure for
knowledge, clarification, surveillance, and discipline, in order to
argue that fiber-optic networks physically instantiate, and thus
shatter, enlightenment.
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